strtoul, strtoull, strtouq — convert a string to an unsigned long integer
#include <stdlib.h>
unsigned long int strtoul( |
const char * | nptr, |
char ** | endptr, | |
int | base) ; |
unsigned long long int strtoull( |
const char * | nptr, |
char ** | endptr, | |
int | base) ; |
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The strtoul
() function
converts the initial part of the string in nptr
to an unsigned long int value according to the given
base
, which must be
between 2 and 36 inclusive, or be the special value 0.
The string may begin with an arbitrary amount of white
space (as determined by isspace(3)) followed by a
single optional '+' or '−' sign. If base
is zero or 16, the string
may then include a "0x" prefix, and the number will be read
in base 16; otherwise, a zero base
is taken as 10 (decimal)
unless the next character is '0', in which case it is taken
as 8 (octal).
The remainder of the string is converted to an unsigned long int value in the obvious manner, stopping at the first character which is not a valid digit in the given base. (In bases above 10, the letter 'A' in either upper or lower case represents 10, 'B' represents 11, and so forth, with 'Z' representing 35.)
If endptr
is not
NULL, strtoul
() stores the
address of the first invalid character in *endptr
. If there were no digits
at all, strtoul
() stores the
original value of nptr
in *endptr
(and returns 0). In
particular, if *nptr
is not '\0' but **endptr
is '\0' on return, the
entire string is valid.
The strtoull
() function
works just like the strtoul
()
function but returns an unsigned long long
int value.
The strtoul
() function
returns either the result of the conversion or, if there was
a leading minus sign, the negation of the result of the
conversion represented as an unsigned value, unless the
original (non-negated) value would overflow; in the latter
case, strtoul
() returns
ULONG_MAX
and sets the global
variable errno
to ERANGE. Precisely the same holds for
strtoull
() (with ULLONG_MAX
instead of ULONG_MAX
).
(not in C99) The given base
contains an
unsupported value.
The resulting value was out of range.
The implementation may also set errno
to EINVAL in case no conversion was performed
(no digits seen, and 0 returned).
strtoul
() conforms to SVr4,
C89, C99 and POSIX-2001, and strtoull
() to C99 and POSIX.1-2001.
Since strtoul
() can
legitimately return 0 or LONG_MAX
(LLONG_MAX
for strtoull
()) on both success and failure,
the calling program should set errno
to 0 before the call, and then
determine if an error occurred by checking whether
errno
has a nonzero value after
the call.
In locales other than the "C" locale, other strings may be accepted. (For example, the thousands separator of the current locale may be supported.)
BSD also has
u_quad_t strtouq
(const char *nptr
,char **endptr
,int base
);
with completely analogous definition. Depending on the
wordsize of the current architecture, this may be equivalent
to strtoull
() or to
strtoul
().
Negative values are considered valid input and are silently converted to the equivalent unsigned long int value.
See the example on the strtol(3) manual page; the use of the functions described in this manual page is similar.